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UNIT-1. OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING. B.TECH II YR II SEMESTER(TERM 08-09) UNIT 1 PPT SLIDES TEXT BOOKS: 1. Java: the complete reference, 7th editon, Herbert schildt, TMH.Understanding 2. OOP with Java, updated edition, T. Budd, pearson eduction. No. of slides: 24.

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UNIT-1

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  1. UNIT-1

  2. OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING B.TECH II YR II SEMESTER(TERM 08-09) UNIT 1 PPT SLIDES TEXT BOOKS: 1. Java: the complete reference, 7th editon, Herbert schildt, TMH.Understanding 2. OOP with Java, updated edition, T. Budd, pearson eduction. No. of slides: 24

  3. INDEX UNIT 1 PPT SLIDES S.NO. TOPIC LECTURE NO. PPTSLIDES • Need for oop paradigm, L1 L1.1TO L1.4 A way of viewing world – Agents • Responsibility, Messages, Methods L2 L2.1 TO L2.3 • classes and instances, L3 L3.1 TO L3.6 class hierarchies, Inheritance • method binding L 4 L4.1 TO L4.5 overriding and exceptions • summary of oop concepts, coping with complexity, L5 L5.1 TO 5.4 abstraction mechanisms

  4. Need for OOP Paradigm • OOP is an approach to program organization and development, which attempts to eliminate some of the drawbacks of conventional programming methods by incorporating the best of structured programming features with several new concepts. • OOP allows us to decompose a problem into number of entities called objects and then build data and methods (functions) around these entities. • The data of an object can be accessed only by the methods associated with the object. L 1.1

  5. Some of the Object-Oriented Paradigm are: • Emphasis is on data rather than procedure. • Programs are divided into objects. • Data Structures are designed such that they Characterize the objects. • Methods that operate on the data of an object are tied together in the data structure. • Data is hidden and can not be accessed by external functions. • Objects may communicate with each other through methods. L 1.2

  6. A way of viewing world – Agents • OOP uses an approach of treating a real world agent as an object. • Object-oriented programming organizes a program around its data (that is, objects) and a set of well-defined interfaces to that data. • An object-oriented program can be characterized as data controlling access to code by switching the controlling entity to data. L 1.3

  7. L 1.4

  8. Responsibility • primary motivation is the need for a platform-independent (that is, architecture- neutral) language that could be used to create software to be embedded in various consumer electronic devices, such as microwave ovens and remote controls. • Objects with clear responsibilities • Each class should have a clear responsibility. • If you can't state the purpose of a class in a single, clear sentence, then perhaps your class structure needs some thought. L 2.1

  9. Messages • We all like to use programs that let us know what's going on. Programs that keep us informed often do so by displaying status and error messages. • These messages need to be translated so they can be understood by end users around the world. • The Section discusses translatable text messages. Usually, you're done after you move a message String into a ResourceBundle. • If you've embedded variable data in a message, you'll have to take some extra steps to prepare it for translation. L 2.2

  10. Methods • A method is a group of instructions that is given a name and can be called up at any point in a program simply by quoting that name. • Drawing a Triangle require draw of three straight lines. This instruction three times to draw a simple triangle. • We can define a method to call this instruction three times and draw the triangle(i.e. create a method drawLine() to draw lines and this method is called repeatedly to achieve the needed task) • The idea of methods appears in all programming languages, although sometimes it goes under the name functions and sometimes under the name procedures. • The name methods is a throw-back to the language C++, from which Java was developed. • In C++, there is an object called a class which can contain methods. However, everything in Java is enclosed within a class .so the functions within it are called methods L 2.3

  11. class FIGURE Ob1 Ob3 Ob2 CIRCLE SQUARE RECTANGLE CLASSES • Class is blue print or an idea of an Object • From One class any number of Instances can be created • It is an encapsulation of attributes and methods L 3.1

  12. syntax of CLASS class <ClassName> { attributes/variables; Constructors(); methods(); } L 3.2

  13. INSTANCE • Instance is an Object of a class which is an entity with its own attribute values and methods. • Creating an Instance • ClassName refVariable; • refVariable = new Constructor(); • or • ClassName refVariable = new Constructor(); L 3.3

  14. Java Class Hierarchy • In Java, class “Object” is the base class to all other classes • If we do not explicitly say extends in a new class definition, it implicitly extends Object • The tree of classes that extend from Object and all of its subclasses are is called the class hierarchy • All classes eventually lead back up to Object • This will enable consistent access of objects of different classes. L 3.4

  15. Inheritance • Methods allows to reuse a sequence of statements • Inheritance allows to reuse classes by deriving a new class from an existing one • The existing class is called the parent class, or superclass, or base class • The derived class is called the child class or subclass. • The child class inherits characteristics of the parent class(i.e the child class inherits the methods and data defined for the parent class L 3.5

  16. Animal Bird weight : int + getWeight() : int Inheritance • Inheritance relationships are often shown graphically in a class diagram, with the arrow pointing to the parent class + fly() : void L 3.6

  17. Method Binding • Objects are used to call methods. • MethodBinding is an object that can be used to call an arbitrary public method, on an instance that is acquired by evaluatng the leading portion of a method binding expression via a value binding. • It is legal for a class to have two or more methods with the same name. • Java has to be able to uniquely associate the invocation of a method with its definition relying on the number and types of arguments. • Therefore the same-named methods must be distinguished: 1) by the number of arguments, or 2) by the types of arguments • Overloading and inheritance are two ways to implement polymorphism. L 4.1

  18. Method Overriding. • There may be some occasions when we want an object to respond to the same method but have different behaviour when that method is called. • That means, we should override the method defined in the superclass. This is possible by defining a method in a sub class that has the same name, same arguments and same return type as a method in the superclass. • Then when that method is called, the method defined in the sub class is invoked and executed instead of the one in the superclass. This is known as overriding. L 4.2

  19. Exceptions in Java • Exception is an abnormal condition that arises in the code sequence. • Exceptions occur during compile time or run time. • “throwable” is the super class in exception hierarchy. • Compile time errors occurs due to incorrect syntax. • Run-time errors happen when • User enters incorrect input • Resource is not available (ex. file) • Logic error (bug) that was not fixed L 4.3

  20. Exception classes • In Java, exceptions are objects. When you throw an exception, you throw an object. You can't throw just any object as an exception, however -- only those objects whose classes descend from Throwable. • Throwable serves as the base class for an entire family of classes, declared in java.lang, that your program can instantiate and throw. • Throwable has two direct subclasses, Exception and Error. • Exceptions are thrown to signal abnormal conditions that can often be handled by some catcher, though it's possible they may not be caught and therefore could result in a dead thread. • Errors are usually thrown for more serious problems, such as OutOfMemoryError, that may not be so easy to handle. In general, code you write should throw only exceptions, not errors. • Errors are usually thrown by the methods of the Java API, or by the Java virtual machine itself. L 4.4

  21. L 4.5

  22. Summary of OOPS The following are the basic oops concepts: They are as follows: • Objects. • Classes. • Data Abstraction. • Data Encapsulation. • Inheritance. • Polymorphism. • Dynamic Binding. • Message Passing. L 5.1

  23. Abstraction in Object-Oriented Programming Procedural Abstraction • Procedural Abstractions organize instructions. Function Power Give me two numbers (base & exponent) I’ll return baseexponent Implementation L 5.2

  24. Data Abstraction • Data Abstractions organize data. StudentType Name (string) Marks (num) Grade (char) Student Number (num) L 5.3

  25. Queue Object Enqueue Is Full Data State Is Empty Dequeue Initialize Behavioral Abstraction • Behavioral Abstractions combine procedural and data abstractions. L 5.4

  26. UNIT-2

  27. OBJECT ORIENTED PROGRAMMING B.TECH II YR II SEMESTER(TERM 08-09) UNIT 2 PPT SLIDES TEXT BOOKS: 1. Java: the complete reference, 7th editon, Herbert schildt, TMH.Understanding 2. OOP with Java, updated edition, T. Budd, pearsoneduction. No. of slides: 85

  28. INDEX UNIT 2 PPT SLIDES S.NO. TOPIC LECTURE NO. PPTSLIDES • History of Java, L1 L1.1TO L1.20 Java buzzwords, data types. • variables, scope and life time of variables,L2 L2.1 TO L2.20 arrays, operators, expressions • control statements, L3 L3.1 TO L3.9 type conversion and costing • simple java program, L 4 L4.1 TO L4.8 classes and objects – concepts of classes • objects, constructors, methods L5 L5.1 TO 5.6 • Access control, this keyword, L6 L6.1 TO 6.8 garbage collection 7overloading methods and constructors, L7 L7.1 TO 7.6 parameter passing 8 Recursion, string handling. L8 L 8.1 TO 8.6

  29. Java History • Computer language innovation and development occurs for two fundamental reasons: 1) to adapt to changing environments and uses 2) to implement improvements in the art of programming • The development of Java was driven by both in equal measures. • Many Java features are inherited from the earlier languages: B  C  C++  Java L 1.1

  30. Before Java: C • Designed by Dennis Ritchie in 1970s. • Before C: BASIC, COBOL, FORTRAN, PASCAL • C- structured, efficient, high-level language that could replace assembly code when creating systems programs. • Designed, implemented and tested by programmers. L 1.2

  31. Before Java: C++ • Designed by Bjarne Stroustrup in 1979. • Response to the increased complexity of programs and respective improvements in the programming paradigms and methods: 1) assembler languages 2) high-level languages 3) structured programming 4) object-oriented programming (OOP) • OOP – methodology that helps organize complex programs through the use of inheritance, encapsulation and polymorphism. • C++ extends C by adding object-oriented features. L 1.3

  32. Java: History • In 1990, Sun Microsystems started a project called Green. • Objective: to develop software for consumer electronics. • Project was assigned to James Gosling, a veteran of classic network software design. Others included Patrick Naughton, ChrisWarth, Ed Frank, and Mike Sheridan. • The team started writing programs in C++ for embedding into – toasters – washing machines – VCR’s • Aim was to make these appliances more “intelligent”. L 1.4

  33. Java: History (contd.) • C++ is powerful, but also dangerous. The power and popularity of C derived from the extensive use of pointers. However, any incorrect use of pointers can cause memory leaks, leading the program to crash. • In a complex program, such memory leaks are often hard to detect. • Robustness is essential. Users have come to expect that Windows may crash or that a program running under Windows may crash. (“This program has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down”) • However, users do not expect toasters to crash, or washing machines to crash. • A design for consumer electronics has to be robust. • Replacing pointers by references, and automating memory management was the proposed solution. L 1.5

  34. Java: History (contd.) • Hence, the team built a new programming language called Oak, which avoided potentially dangerous constructs in C++, such as pointers, pointer arithmetic, operator overloading etc. • Introduced automatic memory management, freeing the programmer to concentrate on other things. • Architecture neutrality (Platform independence) • Many different CPU’s are used as controllers. Hardware chips are evolving rapidly. As better chips become available, older chips become obsolete and their production is stopped. Manufacturers of toasters and washing machines would like to use the chips available off the shelf, and would not like to reinvest in compiler development every two-three years. • So, the software and programming language had to be architecture neutral. L 1.6

  35. Java: History (contd) • It was soon realized that these design goals of consumer electronics perfectly suited an ideal programming language for the Internet and WWW, which should be: • object-oriented (& support GUI) • – robust • – architecture neutral • Internet programming presented a BIG business opportunity. Much bigger than programming for consumer electronics. • Java was “re-targeted” for the Internet • The team was expanded to include Bill Joy (developer of Unix), Arthur van Hoff, Jonathan Payne, Frank Yellin, Tim Lindholm etc. • In 1994, an early web browser called WebRunner was written in Oak. WebRunner was later renamed HotJava. • In 1995, Oak was renamed Java. • A common story is that the name Java relates to the place from where the development team got its coffee. The name Java survived the trade mark search. L 1.7

  36. Java History • Designed by James Gosling, Patrick Naughton, Chris Warth, Ed Frank and Mike Sheridan at Sun Microsystems in 1991. • The original motivation is not Internet: platform-independent software embedded in consumer electronics devices. • With Internet, the urgent need appeared to break the fortified positions of Intel, Macintosh and Unix programmer communities. • Java as an “Internet version of C++”? No. • Java was not designed to replace C++, but to solve a different set of problems. L 1.8

  37. The Java Buzzwords • The key considerations were summed up by the Java team in the following list of buzzwords: • Simple • Secure • Portable • Object-oriented • Robust • Multithreaded • Architecture-neutral • Interpreted • High performance • Distributed • Dynamic L 1.9

  38. simple – Java is designed to be easy for the professional programmer to learn and use. • object-oriented: a clean, usable, pragmatic approach to objects, not restricted by the need for compatibility with other languages. • Robust: restricts the programmer to find the mistakes early, performs compile-time (strong typing) and run-time (exception-handling) checks, manages memory automatically. • Multithreaded: supports multi-threaded programming for writing program that perform concurrent computations L 1.10

  39. Architecture-neutral: Java Virtual Machine provides a platform independent environment for the execution of Java byte code • Interpreted and high-performance: Java programs are compiled into an intermediate representation – byte code: a) can be later interpreted by any JVM b) can be also translated into the native machine code for efficiency. L 1.11

  40. Distributed: Java handles TCP/IP protocols, accessing a resource through its URL much like accessing a local file. • Dynamic: substantial amounts of run-time type information to verify and resolve access to objects at run-time. • Secure: programs are confined to the Java execution environment and cannot access other parts of the computer. L 1.12

  41. Portability: Many types of computers and operating systems are in use throughout the world—and many are connected to the Internet. • For programs to be dynamically downloaded to all the various types of platforms connected to the Internet, some means of generating portable executable code is needed. The same mechanism that helps ensure security also helps create portability. • Indeed, Java's solution to these two problems is both elegant and efficient. L 1.13

  42. Data Types • Java defines eight simple types: 1)byte – 8-bit integer type 2)short – 16-bit integer type 3)int – 32-bit integer type 4)long – 64-bit integer type 5)float – 32-bit floating-point type 6)double – 64-bit floating-point type 7)char – symbols in a character set 8)boolean – logical values true and false L 1.14

  43. byte: 8-bit integer type. Range: -128 to 127. Example: byte b = -15; Usage: particularly when working with data streams. • short: 16-bit integer type. Range: -32768 to 32767. Example: short c = 1000; Usage: probably the least used simple type. L 1.15

  44. int: 32-bit integer type. Range: -2147483648 to 2147483647. Example: int b = -50000; Usage: 1) Most common integer type. 2) Typically used to control loops and to index arrays. 3) Expressions involving the byte, short and int values are promoted to int before calculation. L 1.16

  45. long: 64-bit integer type. Range: -9223372036854775808 to 9223372036854775807. Example: long l = 10000000000000000; Usage: 1) useful when int type is not large enough to hold the desired value • float: 32-bit floating-point number. Range: 1.4e-045 to 3.4e+038. Example: float f = 1.5; Usage: 1) fractional part is needed 2) large degree of precision is not required L 1.17

  46. double: 64-bit floating-point number. Range: 4.9e-324 to 1.8e+308. Example: double pi = 3.1416; Usage: 1) accuracy over many iterative calculations 2) manipulation of large-valued numbers L 1.18

  47. char: 16-bit data type used to store characters. Range: 0 to 65536. Example: char c = ‘a’; Usage: 1) Represents both ASCII and Unicode character sets; Unicode defines a character set with characters found in (almost) all human languages. 2) Not the same as in C/C++ where char is 8-bit and represents ASCII only. L 1.19

  48. boolean: Two-valued type of logical values. Range: values true and false. Example: boolean b = (1<2); Usage: 1) returned by relational operators, such as 1<2 2) required by branching expressions such as if or for L 1.20

  49. Variables • declaration – how to assign a type to a variable • initialization – how to give an initial value to a variable • scope – how the variable is visible to other parts of the program • lifetime – how the variable is created, used and destroyed • type conversion – how Java handles automatic type conversion • type casting – how the type of a variable can be narrowed down • type promotion – how the type of a variable can be expanded L 2.1

  50. Variables • Java uses variables to store data. • To allocate memory space for a variable JVM requires: 1) to specify the data type of the variable 2) to associate an identifier with the variable 3) optionally, the variable may be assigned an initial value • All done as part of variable declaration. L 2.2

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